Under Construction!
Below are some helpful resources for undergraduates. I hope to make this page as comprehensive as possible, but given my own interests (and so the resources I know most about), for the time being it is mainly focused around learning logic.
Helpful Web Resources for General Philosophy
- Jim Pryor (NYU) on how to write a philosophy paper.
- An excellent Prezi example of a philosophy paper by Angela Mendelovici (Western Ontario) - with annotations!
- The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy - basic introductions to a variety of philosophical topics, aimed at undergraduates.
- The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - an encyclopedia of philosophy, with advanced articles aimed at professional philosophers seeking a survey of a topic.
- The London Philosophy Study Guides - an excellent collection of guides for self-directed study in many areas of philosophy, compiled at the universities of London.
- The Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews - a source of book reviews, written by professional philosophers for other professional philosophers, that covers most major book-length philosophical publications.
Resources for Learning Logic
- The open logic project - an open source, collaborative logic textbook.
- An open source logic textbook on Merlot
- A compendium of sources under the title Teach Yourself Logic, compiled by Peter Smith (Cambridge)
- Notes from a variety of seminars run by Toby Meadows (Aberdeen), on topics ranging from advanced logic (completeness/incompleteness, basic model theory, and basic recursion theory) through an introduction to set theory and "A Philosopher's Guide to Forcing".